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Corrections

Because of an editing error, an article on Saturday about women who lead American Indian tribes misstated the name of an organization that provided data on the number of such women. It is the National Congress of American Indians, not the National Congress of Indians. (Go to Article)

An article yesterday about a memorial service for Coretta Scott King misstated the day of her death. It was last Monday, Jan. 30, not Tuesday. (Go to Article)

An article on Saturday about the high rate of AIDS infection among black New Yorkers referred incorrectly to one statistic. According to the city health department, one in five black men ages 40 to 49 in Manhattan Â not in the entire city Â has H.I.V. or AIDS. (The citywide figure is just under 1 in 10 black men.) (Go to Article)

An article on Sunday about a plan by America Online and Yahoo to charge companies for delivery of some e-mail to their customers misstated the background of a business that will process the messages. That company, Goodmail, was founded on the premise of charging postage for high-volume e-mail, not for all e-mail; it has narrowed its focus to companies and organizations that get permission from users to send them mail. The article also misstated the progress of Goodmail's relationship with two clients, the American Red Cross and The New York Times Company. While both have announced that they will use the Goodmail system, they have not yet taken part in testing it. (Go to Article)

A Critic's Notebook article in Weekend on Friday about Wendy Wasserstein's work for television referred incorrectly to her surviving brother Bruce. He is chairman and chief executive of the Lazard investment bank, not a hedge fund titan. (Go to Article)

An obituary yesterday about Reuven Frank, former president of NBC News and a pioneering producer, referred incorrectly to his surviving grandchildren. They are a grandson and a granddaughter, not two grandsons. (Go to Article)

An obituary of the television actor Al Lewis by The Associated Press on Sunday misstated his age. His son Ted Lewis says he was 82, not 95. A picture credit misstated the photographer's given name. He was Henny Ray Abrams, not Henry. (Go to Article)

A picture caption on Monday with a review of men's fashion misspelled the name of a clothing line. It is Generra, as the article said, not Genarra. The Fashion Diary article on the same page misspelled the name of a designer. He is Jack McCollough, not McCullough. (Go to Article)

Editorials/Op-Ed

An Op-Ed article on Sunday, about Chicago's economy, misstated the location of the Cabrini Green housing project. It is on Chicago's Near North Side, not the South Side. (Go to Article)

Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper's journalistic integrity may reach the public editor, Byron Calame, at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.